I believe that laughters are instant vacation
I believe that friends make long journey seem short
I believe that parents can kill with no mercy
I belive that if I were to be in control, you will be dead by now
I believe that hard works pay off in the future
I believe that laziness pay off now!
I believe that if I were to think no one cares, I'll just have to skip a couple of payments
I believe in psycho-kinesis
I believe that change is inevitable, except from vending machines
I believe that the early bird may get the worm
I believe that the second mouse gets the cheese in the trap
I believe that depression is merely anger without enthusiasm
I believe that 99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name
I believe that he who laughs last thinks slowest
I believe that if the world don't suck, we would fall off
I DON'T believe in psychics cause they have to ask for our names
Before you tag, think again...
Are you those type who tag because you expect me to go back to your blog and give you a tag in return?
Than, in this case, you can totally forget about tagging this blog because it's so GERLISSA to not go find your blog and give you a return tag
Get it?
But don't misunderstand!
It is not that I don't like you tagging
In fact I would love a load of tags
But I'm just too lazy too return tags
That's all
I'm a little or maybe just rude
But I'm still learning
Cause I'm Gerlissa
Contradictingly, DO COME BACK FOR REPLIES
A careless touch could be all police or insurance companies need to determine not only your identity, but also your past drug use, if you've fired a gun or handled explosives, even specific medical conditions. "A fingerprint is only good to identify a criminal if you already have their fingerprint on file," said David Russell, a professor at the University of East Anglia, who, along with Pompi Hazarika, helped developed the new technique, reported in the German journal, Angewandte Chemie. "This will give police new tools to help discover that identity." For decades forensic scientists have dusted fingerprints with magnetic particles to reveal the hidden swirls and curls that differentiate each person on the planet. The iron oxide particles attach themselves to the tiny bits of water, minerals, and oils that accumulate on the fingers as they touch various objects and other parts of the body. The new technique attaches the iron oxide particles to antibodies and suspends them both in a liquid solution, which is then drizzled over a fingerprint. If the chemical that a specific antibody targets is present, the molecules latch onto it and glow.